After PLOP-booting VL the loading of Vector Linux 7.0 Light Live Alpha 5 stops because VL7 can't find the medium it is booting and loading from

I see the same thing trying to boot from USB stick, where VL6 has no problem.

Edit: Running it live from USB stick now. First (failed) attempt was when trying unetbootin. Then I added it to a bootable flash drive that I've been using for quite some time. It was initially created using instructions for Clonezilla, but it has an easy to edit menu which lets me manually add entries.

Booting Vector Linux 7.0 Light Live Alpha 5 from an USB-stick gives no problems here too if booted from an USB-port that is bootable via the mainboard-bios.But problems do arise if the USB-port is NOT bootable via the mb-bios. I don't think that Plop or Kexec-booting make any difference. Although I still didn't try out kexec-booting.

Personally I use Claws, but for this iso I think we should stick with opera's intergrated client for reasons of space, but recommend Claws as an add on, alternatively if you use say Midori (or how ever you spell it) with java/flash inabled as a lighter replacement then you will need claws or something similar....

Personally I use Claws, but for this iso I think we should stick with opera's intergrated client for reasons of space, but recommend Claws as an add on, alternatively if you use say Midori (or how ever you spell it) with java/flash inabled as a lighter replacement then you will need claws or something similar....

I also agree with just having Opera's email client on the cdrom, since it is already there.

The only thing that would change this, is if opera's client (and opera) use significantly more runtime resources.

I used the latest versions of Plop Boot Manager for PCMCIA-USB. I just tried to boot with Kexec. But also Kexec will not load and start up VL7.Same error. So I really think the problem is VL7 itself.

This is what the maker of PLOP BM, Elmar, says about booting distro's from a 'not by mainboard-bios bootable' pcmcia usb drive:---when you want to boot a linux distro from a pcmcia usb pccard, then the linux kernel must have pcmcia/pccard support compiled into the kernel, or the distro has to load the required modules during bootup. you have to ask the people of the distro to add this feature when you are not able to boot the distro from the usb pccard. or you compile the kernel by yourself.---

I think this was well done in VL6 but not in VL7.Or my knowledge is too simple and short.

Running from a live cd. Just began testing. Really like the default theme, menu layout, toolbar, and volume control. I like that it's more of a minimal system right now (and hope it stays that way). Great choice of apps. The few I've tried work well (vlc, wicd, opera, and grsync). Did not do any upgrades, but ran gslapt, did an update, and searched for several packages. Like the icewm quick config.

I was interested in using an app I've read about - some sort of tool for porting arch's aur packages. Wanted to try it on something like cdw, but couldn't find the vl tool.

Benchmarks of several versions of Opera vs Firefox show Opera falling in an inferior position in terms of memory management. Tomhardware benchmarks consistantly exhibit this in both Windows and OSX (I don't think Toms does/has any Linux benchmarks).

Since it looks like Opera's integrated features like email won't be defaults, how about the idea of taking Opera off of the Light cd altogether? Anyone that really likes Opera can of course install from the repos, and its removal will keep more consistent with the nature of Light.

Benchmarks of several versions of Opera vs Firefox show Opera falling in an inferior position in terms of memory management. Tomhardware benchmarks consistantly exhibit this in both Windows and OSX (I don't think Toms does/has any Linux benchmarks).

Since it looks like Opera's integrated features like email won't be defaults, how about the idea of taking Opera off of the Light cd altogether? Anyone that really likes Opera can of course install from the repos, and its removal will keep more consistent with the nature of Light.

And use the browser Midori instead. I do like it and use it more and more.